Electricity: measuring and testing – Magnetic – With means to create magnetic field to test material
Reexamination Certificate
2000-04-18
2002-06-25
Snow, Walter E. (Department: 2862)
Electricity: measuring and testing
Magnetic
With means to create magnetic field to test material
C324S260000
Reexamination Certificate
active
06411085
ABSTRACT:
The invention relates to a process for determining ferromagnetic impurities in workpieces in nonmagnetic material, especially in wheel disks or shafts of gas turbines for aircraft or the like. It relates further to an apparatus for carrying out the process and a magnetic-field measuring device, especially as a part of this apparatus.
In machine construction practice, increasingly workpieces of components under this designation of nonmagnetic materials, especially nickel-based materials or titanium materials are made so that the workpieces will have high mechanical and/or thermal loading resistances. This applies above all for components of aircraft gas turbines since materials used for them have the smallest possible specific gravity.
This applies especially to nickel-based alloys and titanium-based alloys. In the course of metallurgical fabrication processes, iron-containing impurities enter these alloys. These impurities give rise to defects in the microstructure of the material and affect thereby the mechanism loadability of the workpiece. They are referred to as defects and because of their iron content, as ferromagnetic defects. Depending upon the size and number of the impurities and their spatial locations in the workpiece, the workpiece can be damaged by certain mechanical loads, leading to the destruction of the workpiece. Since ferromagnetic impurities can always be contained in a nickel-based alloy or a titanium-based alloy, for every concrete use and loading associated therewith there is a certain permissible mass, i.e. size of the impurities and their spatial positions in a workpiece which can be established. This maximum permissible mass of impurities is designated as the critical mass.
Especially critical with respect to the aforementioned impurities, are components or workpieces for aircraft gas turbines since, in these cases, the durability requirements are especially high. This applies even for the production of the respective workpieces, especially the wheel disks carrying the rotor blades or also the shafts of an aircraft turbine in which the mass of the ferromagnetic impurities in the workpieces or a blank thereof should be detected before this workpiece is further processed and especially built into the aircraft turbine. The latter should take place only when the determined mass of the possibly-present impurities is less than the above-mentioned critical mass for such impurities.
Basically three processes for the detection of ferromagnetic impurities are useable, namely, X-ray tomography, ultrasonic measurements and magnetoscope measurements.
By means of X-ray tomography, impurities can be detected based upon their different compositions and the X-ray contrasts associated therewith. X-ray tomography is, however, extremely time-consuming, very expensive and outside routine processes in a production sequence. The method is in any case used for comparative measurements and for calibrating of the processes.
An ultrasonic measurement detects impurities based upon their different densities. By the scattering of the ultrasound crystallites of the basic alloy, the contrast is significantly reduced. The method is therefore suitable only for larger impurities in workpieces which are not very thick.
The magnetoscope measuring process utilizes the fact that the aforedescribed impurities are ferromagnetic. In the process, a magnetic-field measuring device with a magnetic-field sensor is used which contains a magnet by means of which the impurities are magnetized. Simultaneously the measurement of the magnetic signals of the magnetized impurities is carried out.
The magnetoscope process has, however, in its known form, a series of drawbacks. Since the magnetization occurs only in the measurement region, impurities are differently magnetized depending upon their depths within the workpiece. Since the magnetic induction of the magnetizing device decreases with the third power of the distance, the impurities at the greatest distance from the magnetic-field sensor are only extremely weakly magnetized and are thus not detected by it. Furthermore, the magnetic field as a consequence of its point-like effect is inhomogeneous which has, as a consequence, that the magnetic signals of the impurities differ depending upon their [the impurities] orientation with respect to the magnetizing device. Because of the under-defined magnetizing state, conclusions cannot be made as to the mass of the impurities and their depths in the workpiece.
It is the object of the invention to provide a process suitable for serial production which can enable detection of ferromagnetic impurities in nonmagnetic workpieces precisely, reliably and in a simple manner.
A further object is to conceive an apparatus for carrying out this process and a magnetic-field measuring device associated therewith.
As far as the process goes, the objects are achieved according to the invention in that the workpiece is subjected to a magnetic field, the impurities at least in sections of the workpiece are uniformly magnetized and the workpiece is thereafter fed to a magnetic-field measuring device and there the magnetic signals of the respective impurity is measured.
The basic thought of the invention is that the workpiece or the impurities, prior to the specific measurement by means of a magnetization process is brought into a magnetically-ordered and thus defined state and only thereafter is a respective magnetic signal of an impurity detected with the aid of the magnetic-field measuring device, for example, by a suitable scanning, i.e. relative movement between the magnetic-field sensor and workpiece. Thus the requirement is satisfied that a particular impurity is not detected exclusively with respect to its position but also with respect to its mass in a relatively precise manner.
It is worth carrying out the process with a through-magnetization so that the impurities are magnetized to saturation. In most applications, however, a magnetization is sufficient which does not reach the saturation limits for generating magnetic signals from the impurities.
In any case it is advantageous for the workpiece to be subjected to a substantially homogeneous magnetic field. To the extent that the workpiece is subjected at an earlier point in time to a stronger magnetic field than the magnetization field strength applied, before the magnetization [from which the signal is to be obtained], a demagnetization should be effected.
In a further embodiment of the invention it is provided that the workpiece is scanned in a scanning plane with the magnetic measuring device and the position of the impurities determined with reference to this plane in this manner. For detecting the depth of the respective impurity in the workpiece, it is possible basically to scan the workpiece in a further scanning plane, preferably lying transversely to the first.
According to the invention however, the following features are proposed for determining the depths of the respective impurities in the workpiece:
(a) Detection of the signal of the impurity at a first distance between the magnetic-field sensor and the surface of the workpiece;
(b) Detection of the signal from the impurity at a second distance between the magnetic-field sensor and the surface of the workpiece;
(c) Forming a signal ratio as a quotient of the measurement signal from the two detected signals from the impurity;
(d) Determining the depth based upon a curve which portrays the dependency between the signal ratio and the depth.
Thus the depth measurement is effected starting from the first scanning plane by two measuring steps at different distances from the surface of the workpiece to form a signal ratio and by subsequent marking off from a curve portraying the dependency between the single ratio and depth. The term “curve” is here understood in its most general form. It can be in a graphic form or in the form of a matrix or function. It will be understood that it is established initially by corresponding calibration and then firmed up. It has been found that with th
Plath Armin
Schreiber Karl
Siegel Michael
Tavrin Yuri
Dubno Herbert
Forschungszentrum Julich GmbH
Snow Walter E.
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